Edmonton Journal

Raptors lay beating on defenceles­s Cavaliers

- MIKE GANTER mike.ganter@sunmedia.ca mganter@postmedia.com

The Cleveland Cavaliers had a film session Wednesday to show the players just how little they were trying on defence.

Suffice to say there had to be a lot of napping going on in that particular film session.

Either that, or whatever lesson was driven home was quickly forgotten, because an understaff­ed Raptors squad made a mockery of the Cavs’ so-called defence.

They scored in every way imaginable and did so without the services of their starting point guard and starting power forward.

But no Kyle Lowry and no Serge Ibaka had little to no effect on the Raptors, who coasted to an easy 133-99 beat-down in a game the Cavs never led.

The ball movement that had fallen off in the absence of Lowry a game ago returned in a big way, as evidenced by 18 first-half assists, en route to 30 in the game.

The lone remaining member of Toronto’s big three wasn’t much of a scoring factor in this one, either, as DeMar DeRozan readily gave up the ball every time the Cavs threw two defenders at him, which was most of the night.

“He did a great job,” Raptors head coach Dwane Casey said. “That’s one of the best jobs of DeMar just taking what the game gave him. He let the game come to him. He was inviting and embracing the double teams and then picking them apart.”

DeRozan only had two points by the half, but was leading the Raptors with seven assists through the first 24 minutes. He would go on to finish with a modest 13 points and a team-high eight assists. More impressive­ly, he had to play just 29 minutes.

But no one, from Casey to DeRozan, was reading too much into this one, as dominant a win as it was.

“Regular season and playoffs are two different things,” DeRozan said, reminding everyone where the next step is for the Raptors. “I’m pretty sure the next time we play them, they’re going to remember this game, and it’s going to be a whole different game. We have to be ready for that. That’s the season. Just like we kept in mind what happened to us in the playoffs. But whoever we play against, we’re going to try to go out there and do the same thing to them.”

The scoring came from everywhere on the roster. Jonas Valanciuna­s had nine points and nine rebounds just six minutes into the game before he had to sit down due to early foul trouble.

The Raptors merely turned to the next guy, whether that was Fred VanVleet leading the second unit with a career-best 22 points, or Pascal Siakam looking to atone for a couple key defensive gaffes earlier in the week with a 16-point performanc­e.

As talented as this Cavs team is, it’s clear they’re not close to making that talent work just yet.

LeBron James led all scorers in the game with 26 points, but it was his mid-game takeover of a timeout that will be the talking point of this game.

James appeared to hijack head coach Ty Lue’s timeout to let off a little steam in the direction of what looked like every member of the Cavs roster.

Don’t be fooled. The Cavs are down right now, but history says that come playoff time they will have things righted.

For one night, though, it had to feel good for the Raptors to be the ones laying the beating, rather than on the receiving end.

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